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There's a lot of room for personal and professional creativity when choosing a business name, but there are three main considerations to keep in mind:
Trademark law will prevent another business from using a name or logo that is likely to be confused with your business name if your business name is entitled to trademark protection. If your business is anything but a small, local, service, or retail business, such as a dry cleaners or a fabric store, you'll probably want to take advantage of this.
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Any business name used to market and identify products or services is a trademark. For example, McDonald's uses its business name to market its hamburgers. But to qualify for trademark protection under the trademark laws, your business name should be what trademark law considers "distinctive."
Distinctive business names (such as Xerox, Quicken, and Amazon.com) are clever and memorable, and they usually receive protection under federal and state trademark law. Common or ordinary names (such as Smith's Hardware, Tom's Gourmet Sandwiches, and Pets.com) usually do not.
While there's no magic formula for concocting distinctive business names, they tend to be made up of surprising or fanciful words that often have nothing to do with the underlying business, product, or service, such as Kodak film or Double Rainbow ice cream. However, there can be a downside to coining a brand new word or using a completely arbitrary term. Business names that have nothing to do with the underlying product or service often require extensive and expensive marketing efforts to become established.
The best names for small businesses are those that customers can easily remember and associate with your business. For this reason, many small businesses prefer to use words that cleverly suggest qualities about the underlying product or service without describing them outright, such as Lending Tree for loans, Slenderella for diet food products, or The Body Shop for personal hygiene products. These names are also considered distinctive and are therefore protected as trademarks.
Once you've come up with some ideas for distinctive names, you'll need to be sure you're not stepping on an existing name or trademark.
As a first rule, don't use part of a famous name and hope you'll get away with it because you plan to use it in a different way, as in Microsoft Cushions, or M & M Marketing. If you attract the attention of the big guys, you'll be threatened with a lawsuit and will most likely have to change your business name on all of your marketing material.
For not so famous names, you'll have to do a name search to find out if the same name, or similar names, are already in use, and how they're being used. If another company is using the same or a similar name to market different products and services, it may be fine for you to use the name for your business.
Finally, if your business is a corporation, LLC, or limited partnership, in addition to checking for existing trademarks, you must be sure your business name isn't the same as that of an existing corporation, LLC, or limited partnership in your state. You'll have to contact your state filing office to find out how to search their name databases.
If your business will have a website, you must decide what your domain name (the address used to identify your website) will be. Using all or part of your business name in your domain name will make your website easier for potential customers to find. Since many domain names are already taken, check what's available before you settle on your business name. You can search for available domain names by visiting a domain name registrar such as register.com.
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